 |
|
According to Zhang Liang, he copied the pigeon in the top right corner of his photo and pasted it in the top left corner. (Photo: www.nddaily.com) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, April 7 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese photographer who forged an award-winning photograph has apologized for his bad behavior.
Monday's People's Day reported that Zhang Liang, a
former photographer of Harbin Daily, admitted that he added a pigeon to a photo
using Photoshop software. The photo was taken in February 2004 and showed
pigeons receiving bird flu vaccine shots from medical workers in front of Sophia
Cathedral in Harbin.
The photo won the top prize in the first China
International Press Photo Contest, held by the Photojournalist Society of China
(PSC) in 2005.
"I would like to apologize to the public," said
Zhang, who had been dismissed from Harbin Daily four days ago.
According to Zhang, he copied the pigeon in the top
right corner of his photo and pasted it in the top left corner.
"I did it to make the photo perfect," Zhang was
quoted by the newspaper, "It was the first time for me to perfect pictures with
computer technology and I did it only once."
Last Thursday, the PSC cancelled the award granted to
Zhang's photo after an expert panel confirmed it was forged.
But the society has been under criticism that it had
been slow on the uptake.
The photo was first questioned online last April by
netizens and Xu Lin, a PSC official.
Late last month, Jiang Duo, one of the judges for the
contest and former PSC vice-chairman, quit because of the society's ambiguous
attitude toward the forgery accusation.
Jiang made an online apology for not being able to
identify the forgery, while acknowledging the photo as a fake.
"It is a heart-breaking choice. But I made up my mind
because the society I founded is tolerating cheating," he said in a personal
blog.
But Hu Ying, secret-general of the PSC and also a
member of the contest panel, denied that the PSC has delayed the probe on the
photo.
"The PSC has placed great importance on this event.
The investigation progressed slowly because of a busy schedule in the latter
half of last year," he told Shanghai Morning Post.
Several forgery scandals have hit the country's
photography circle in the past few years.
On February this year, an award-winning photographer
Liu Weiqiang admitted that he faked a photo showing more than 20 Tibetan
antelopes roaming peacefully under a railway bridge along the Qinghai-Tibet
railway where a train was roaring past.
His photo had been chosen as one of "the 10 most
impressive news photos of 2006", an annual event sponsored by Chinese Central
Television.
With computer technology, it is very easy and costs
little for photographers to forge photos, said Xu Lin, the PSC official who had
actively pushed the investigation into Zhang's photo forgery.
"Driven by profits and under great pressure, some
turn to computer technologies to make photos look better and easy to be chosen
by editors," he said.
Zhang also said that some other photographers use
computer software to get rid of objects in original pictures, such as wires and
chimneys, which made him think it is no big deal.
"I was wrong to be opportunistic," he said.
"I admired Zhang for admitting what he did was wrong.
It is the right thing to do," Xu said.
The industry and society should also think of why a
photo like Zhang's would win a prize, said Prof. Huang Dan, with the School of
Journalism of Shanghai-based Fudan University.
"I am sorry to find that some media do not realize
that the influence of news reports is determined by their credibility," Huang
said.